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Do You Really Respect Me?

Edric asked me that question two days ago. I was quiet. We were on the Emirates flight to Dubai to speak at a Homeschool Conference for Homeschool Global Middle East. It didn’t seem like the appropriate time to have so private a discussion with people around us. But, I thought long and hard about his question, especially since it was obviously coming from a place of hurt on his end.

He wanted to know if I respected him because I had been countering his decisions as of late, meeting our discussions with a challenging tone. For example, when he asked the kids to memorize their recent Bible passage, Psalm 1:1-3, I didn’t want to do the actions like he was making the kids do. In my mind, having to come up with movements to memorize the passage was childish. I could memorize the passage without doing the actions. However, my mistake was disregarding Edric in front of the kids and belittling his idea. I could’ve expressed my opinion in private, afterwards. Naturally, Edric felt slighted and upset with me. And of course, doing this made our bible study tense, and I wasn’t a good example to the kids.

This instance, as well as a couple of others, made Edric feel like I didn’t hold him in high regard as a leader, that I doubted his capacity for sound judgment. As much as I wanted to defend myself, the truth was, I had not been respectful of him. My tone had been negative and combative, and Edric didn’t appreciate that.

And Edric was right. I had not been respectful of him in the past few days. Why? Well, it was primarily personality differences that irked me.They were small things, and nothing having to do with morality, but because I started to nit-pick as a wife, I was looking at EVERY LITTLE THING wrong with him (different than me) so I could excuse my own ungraciousness.

Today, at breakfast in the hotel, when he tried to bring up the discussion again, I still struggled to admit my wrong. I retaliated by saying things like, “Are you asking me about respect because your idea of a wife is someone who says yes to your every decision and just agrees with you, with a smile all the time? Because I’m not like that. I am thinking-kind-woman (that didn’t sound very smart), and I that’s one of the reasons why you married me, right?”

Even though there was some validity to my point, it was the way it came across. I was aggressive and defensive. Edric, in the meantime, was the calm one.

The discussion was left unresolved. Edric was disappointed by my resistance, and I felt irritated with his “demands.” It felt like Edric was trying to force-fit me into this mold of womanhood that I didn’t think I fit into, that I didn’t think was reasonable. And he didn’t feel like I got the point of his perspective. The real issue was my tone and my manner. It had nothing to do with his respect for me as a woman, a person, or his value of my opinions.

Since Edric and I had to prepare for our event, we agreed upon a pause. In the meantime, I prayed and aired my frustrations to the Lord, and ranted to him. Thankfully, God never lets me get away with bad attitudes and un-Christ-like thinking.

This is when I discerned the Lord telling me…When you are disrespecting your husband, you are really disrespecting My Word and My Truth.

That thought struck me.

Whenever God makes it about Himself and me, turning the focus away from my issues with Edric, spiritual sensibility starts to kick in. It’s as Proverbs declares, “The fear of the Lord is the foundation of true knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and discipline.” (Proverbs 1:7)

When I am resistant to being the kind of wife that Edric hopes for me to be and longs for me to be, it’s evidence of a rebellious streak in me. The truth is I don’t want to be told what to do, and that’s not a good thing. It’s not really rebellion to Edric, either. That’s the scary part. At the end of the day, Edric is a representation of God’s authority in my life. Therefore, it’s really me being defiant towards God when I don’t respect Edric.

James 3:17 explains, “But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy.” When Edric and I were dialoguing, and trying to come to a point of resolution, I was spinning the situation, and diverting from the real issue. I wasn’t pure in my thoughts, nor peaceable or gentle. I was judgmental and combative.

Edric was trying to open up his heart to me, to be vulnerable. He was very honestly asking, “Babe, do you really believe in me? Do you really hold me in high regard? Because I long for that.” In fact, he even added, “What will make you respect me? How can I earn your respect?”

When he sincerely expressed how he wanted to earn my respect, I realized once again how much it meant to him. If I wasn’t going to willing and gladly give this him, where would he end up looking for it? Who else had the opportunity and privilege of affirming and encouraging his leadership? This is supposed to be a role that I embrace as his wife. He shouldn’t have to feel like he needs to earn my respect. I should be the one making him feel like he is respected and honored.

Furthermore, when I react to him in a negative way, in a disrespectful way, it’s reveals my own weakness more than it does Edric’s. Failure to exercise control over my emotions so that they leak out unkindly is evidence of a spiritual weak person, someone who can’t rise above her frustrations to exercise self-control and exhibit restraint or grace.

To honor Edric, I want to say that he is an amazing husband and a gentleman. When I write about the honest realities of our marriage, it’s not because I think he is an awful person. He tries his best to be loving and sweet to me, but I have character issues that I wrestle with that I need to confront.

Even tonight, as we continued our conversation, he was sensible without being insensitive. He had a good point when he said, “We will just have to deal with this “irresolvable tension” (Andy Stanley’s phrase).”

There will always be things in him that I don’t like, there will always be things in me that he doesn’t like. That’s the irresolvable aspect we have to live with, and the tension will be having to choose between an ungodly or godly response.

Both of us have the choice. The first option is to act on that dislike in a negative way. For me, it’s about being disrespectful. And for Edric, it’s about being unloving. However, the other option is to extend grace, and remember that God would have us do otherwise…that we must do otherwise!

So that’s where we are at. There was no amazing epiphany or new learning. Instead it was about coming to a point of mutual understanding and recognition – that he is who he is, and I am who I am. We are different and probably always will be. We can certainly keep improving and changing for the better, but while our differences remain, we’re going to have to see these as God’s way of causing us to grow in patience, love, and forgiveness.

As I write this now, my heart’s already changing. In fact, I’m watching Edric get up on stage to speak and do what he’s so gifted at, and I’m like, I really DO respect this man!

Why do I make such a big deal about our differences? He’s amazing! And he’s my man!

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7 thoughts on “Do You Really Respect Me?”

This is so timely Joy, i could really relate you on this..we had just attended the HGME Conference. On our way to Abu Dhabi, while were on the bus, he told me some rules for our homeschooling journey. Then he started addressing those failures of mine in homeschooling. Then I started to defend myself. My thinking was ” nkaattend lang ng conference, ang dami ng sinabi” “kala mo naman tumutulong sa homeschooling nmin” hindi nman siya intentional dad” ..blahhh…the bottom line is, I did disrespect him and create tension to both of us. Tama ka, we have a choice. So my choice is to submit coz its Godly response. Then let him lead..I thank God for the provision and the opportunity for him to attend the conference at least for almost 4 years of homeschooling, were on the same page now and we could work things out together . Praise be to God!

I encourage you to pray. I’ve known couples who are like this. God is more committed to our husband’s character growth and change than we are. In other words, He wants to cause them to become the best version of themselves. So I encourage wives to try their best to do their best for the Lord, and leave the results of changing to God. It may not happen overnight, but faithfulness in prayer and in our own actions is key 🙂 Don’t lose hope 🙂

Hi Joy! I can totally relate to this. Just one question though… Given a situation, what if your husband is the one who was overreacting and should also do a self-check? Like, you responded in an innocent manner, yet he thinks you are disrespecting him. What advice can you give for such a scenario? In my case, I honestly did not know what to do or say, because he was insisting I disrespected him. When actually, I did not even know how we got to the situation where we are arguing. Will really appreciate your thoughts on this. Thanks and God bless!

Maybe you can ask him, “If I could do the situation over again, how would you have liked me to respond?” I get where you are coming from. I feel the same way at times, and I get frustrated because I think that I’m not wrong. But when I ask Edric how I could’ve done it in a better way, whether it is something I said or a behaviour, he usually is able to give a good suggestion. 🙂 Hope this helps!

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TeachwithJoy is a product of marriage, family, and love. This site is not about perfection, it is about my passion for sharing everything that I have learned from both failures and triumphs. Join me in my journey through married life, parenthood, and homeschooling as we discover the encouragement, joy, and inspiration of God’s grace.